Getting arrested in the city of Sacramento has its own texture. This is the state capital, so the badges on the scene aren't always who you'd guess: Sacramento PD works the grid and the neighborhoods, the Sheriff covers the unincorporated edges, and the CHP and California State Police run the freeways and the Capitol blocks. A DUI stop on the Railyards side of downtown, a fight outside a midtown bar, a theft arrest near the K Street corridor, a drug charge off Stockton Boulevard, each one starts with a different agency writing the report that a deputy DA later builds a case on. Where it all ends up is the same county courthouse downtown, now the Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye Sacramento County Courthouse at 500 G Street in the Railyards.
Karan Saini works out of Modesto, roughly an hour south on Highway 99, and he's straight about that. Sacramento is a capital city with a deep bench of defense lawyers and a crowded criminal calendar. He's not local-born here. What he is: a lawyer who spent years inside a district attorney's office, in Stanislaus County, learning how prosecutors decide what to charge and how hard to push it. A deputy DA in Sacramento builds a case off the same playbook. Karan reads it from the inside and pulls it apart for the defense.
The work splits two ways. Criminal: DUI on the downtown grid or the freeways feeding into it, domestic violence, theft, drug charges, and the serious felonies that put years on the table. Injury: collisions on Interstate 5 and Highway 50, motorcycle and pedestrian wrecks, dog bites, bad falls, and wrongful-death claims insurers would rather underpay. One attorney handles both sides of your problem.
Karan speaks English, Hindi, and Punjabi, and the firm offers Spanish-language services, so nothing about your case gets lost in translation. Consultations are free. If you've been charged or hurt in Sacramento, call 209-809-1634 before you say anything to an officer or an adjuster.
